Modular hybrid electric vehicle rotor hub

ABSTRACT

A rotor hub includes a sheet metal cylinder including spline teeth including angularly spaced crests and valleys, a tube surrounding the cylinder, secured to the crests and supporting a rotor thereon, a hub secured to the cylinder and supported for rotation, a torque converter, and a flex plate secured to the hub and the torque converter.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This is a continuation-in-part application of pending U. S. applicationSer. No. 13/362,018, filed Jan. 31, 2012.

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION

This invention relates to a powertrain of hybrid electric vehicles,particularly to a powertrain module that can be installed between andsecured to an engine output and a transmission input.

Hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) have both an internal combustion engineand an electric machine, which are alternately, or in combination, usedto propel the vehicle. A variety of different powertrains are used inhybrid vehicles such as a parallel configuration, in which the engine isconnected to the motor by a disconnect clutch with the motor driving atorque converter input of an automatic power transmission. Thetransmission has an output which is connected to a differential coupledto the two driven wheels of the vehicle.

A need exists in the industry for a hybrid electric powertrain thatincludes a modular subassembly for use with a variety of engines andtransmissions, such that the module can be installed between and securedto an output of one of a number of engines and to an input of one of anumber of transmissions. The assembled powertrain may then be employedin a variety of vehicles. The module should include a hydraulicallyactuated disconnect clutch, the electric machine and suitable powerpaths between the engine and electric machine to the transmission input.Preferably, the module provides for hydraulic communication from thetransmission's hydraulic system to the clutch, a balance dam and theelectric machine. The module must provide an oil sump containinghydraulic fluid delivered to the module, and a path for continuallyreturning that fluid to the transmission's oil sump so that thetransmission pump is continually supplied reliably with fluid.

Most disconnect clutches are dry, but wet clutches are generally morecontrollable and allow oil cooling of the clutch and motor. Nesting thedisconnect clutch inside the motor rotor allows improves packaging butgenerally requires an expensive rotor hub since it must hold the rotor,clutch piston and clutch plates.

The module should require low manufacturing and assembly costs, novehicle body modification, and must provide reliable performance.

SUMMARY OF INVENTION

A rotor hub includes a sheet metal cylinder including spline teethincluding angularly spaced crests and valleys, a tube surrounding thecylinder, secured to the crests and supporting a rotor thereon, a hubsecured to the cylinder and supported for rotation, a torque converter,and a flex plate secured to the hub and the torque converter.

A method for forming a rotor hub includes forming a sheet metal cylinderhaving spline teeth defining angularly spaced crests and valleys,securing a tube surrounding the cylinder to the crests, securing a rotoron the tube, forming a hub secured to the cylinder, and supporting thehub for rotation about an axis.

The rotor hub is comprises three simple, low-cost components a cylinder,a cylindrical tube, and a hub. Torque is transmitted between the hub andthe torque converter through the flex plate.

Centrifugal force causes automatic transmission fluid (ATF) to flowradially continually outward through the cylinder, tube and rotor,thereby carrying heat from clutch plates, cylinder and tube away fromthe module. ATF that exits the assembly falls due to gravity to a sumpat the bottom of the module, passes through a cooler and returns to thetransmission sump, from which it is drawn by suction into thetransmission pump for recirculation through the hydraulic system.

The scope of applicability of the preferred embodiment will becomeapparent from the following detailed description, claims and drawings.It should be understood, that the description and specific examples,although indicating preferred embodiments of the invention, are given byway of illustration only. Various changes and modifications to thedescribed embodiments and examples will become apparent to those skilledin the art.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

The invention will be more readily understood by reference to thefollowing description, taken with the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIGS. 1A and 1B comprise a side cross-sectional view of a powertrainmodule showing a front connection to an engine output and a rearconnection to a transmission torque converter input;

FIG. 2 is a side cross-sectional view of a portion of the powertrainmodule showing a component functioning as a clutch reaction plate and aforward support of the electric machine's rotor; and

FIG. 3 is a side cross-sectional view of a rotor hub formed from stampedcomponents;

FIG. 4 is a cross section taken at plane 4-4 of FIG. 3;

FIG. 5 is a cross section taken at plane 5-5 of FIG. 3; and

FIG. 6 is a side view of the rotor and end plates.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate a module 10 of a powertrain for a hybridelectric vehicle that includes an engine having a rotary output 12; atorsional damper 14, secured to the engine output 12; an input shaft 16,secured by a spline 18 to an output 20 of damper 14; a disconnect clutch22, supported on a clutch hub 24 that is secured by a spline 26 to inputshaft 16; an electric machine 28, which includes a stator 30 bolted to afront bulkhead 32 and a rotor 34 supported by a first leg 36 and asecond leg 38 for rotation about an axis 39; a rotor hub 40, securedpreferably by a weld to leg 38; and a flexplate 42, secured at one endby a spline connection 44 to rotor hub 40 and secured at the oppositeend by bolts 46 to a torque converter casing 48, which encloses ahydrokinetic torque converter 49. The electric machine 28 may be anelectric motor or an electric motor-generator.

Torque converters suitable for use in the powertrain are disclosed inand described with reference to FIGS. 4a, 4b, 5, 12 and 15 of U.S.patent application Ser. No. 13/325,101, filed Dec. 14, 2011, the entiredisclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference.

The torque converter 49 includes a bladed impeller wheel located withinand secured to casing 48; a bladed turbine, driven hydrokinetically bythe impeller and secured by a spline 50 to the input shaft 52 of anautomatic transmission 54; and a bladed stator wheel, located betweenthe turbine and stator and secured to a stator shaft 56, which is heldagainst rotation on a transmission housing 58.

A rear bulkhead 60, secured by bolts 62 to the transmission housing 58,is fitted at its radial inner surface with a hydraulic seal 64, whichcontacts the radial outer surface of rotor hub 40.

A flywheel 66, secured by bolts 68 to the engine's rotary output 12,carries an engine starting gear 70, which is secured by a disc 72,welded to the starting gear and flywheel.

A bearing 74 supports the first leg 36 for rotation on the frontbulkhead 32. A bearing 76 supports the second leg 38 for rotation on therotor hub 40. A tube 78, aligned with axis 39 and supporting the rotor34 for rotation about the axis, is secured to the first leg 36 andsecond leg 38. Lips 80, 82 at the front and rear ends, respectively, oftube 78 may be rolled radially outward to secure the rotor 34 to tube 78and to prevent axial displacement of the rotor 34 relative to the tube.The inner surface of tube 78 is formed with an axial spline 81, which isengaged by the legs 36, 38 and alternate plates 83 of the disconnectclutch 22. The friction plates 84 of clutch 22 are secured by an axialspline formed on the radial outer surface of clutch hub 24.

A hydraulic servo for actuating clutch 22 includes a piston 86, balancedam 88, return spring 90 and hydraulic lines for transmitting actuatingpressure to the pressure control volume 92 at the right hand side ofpiston 86 and to the pressure balance volume 94 at the left hand side ofthe piston. Piston 86 moves leftward in a cylinder formed by the rearleg 38 when actuating pressure and hydraulic fluid is supplied to volume92, by the use of seals 151 and 152, thereby causing clutch 22 to engageand driveably connect rotor 34 and the engine output 12 through damper14, input shaft 16, clutch hub 24 and clutch 22.

Because the piston 86, balance dam 88 and return spring 90 are supportedon the rotor hub 40, rotational inertia of the piston 86, balance dam 88and return spring 90 is located on the output side, i.e., the rotor sideof clutch 22.

Rotor 34 is continually driveably connected to the transmission inputshaft 52 through the torque path that includes rear leg 38, rotor hub40, flexplate 42, torque converter casing 48, the hydrodynamic driveconnection between the torque converter impeller and turbine, which isconnected by spline 50 to transmission input shaft 52.

A resolver 100, a highly accurate type of rotary electrical transformerused for measuring degrees of rotation, is secured by bolts 102 to thefront bulkhead 32, is supported on the front bulkhead 32 and first leg,and is located axially between the front bulkhead 32 and rear bulkhead60.

The teeth of spline 44, which produces a rotary drive connection betweenflexplate 42 and rotor hub 40, are fitted together such that no lash isproduced when torque is transmitted between the flexplate and rotor hub.Flexplate 42 is formed with a thick walled portion 104 having a threadedhole 106 that terminate at a web 108. The external spline teeth onflexplate 42 are forced axially into engagement with the internal splineteeth on rotor hub 40 by bolts 110, which engage threaded holes in theright-hand end of rotor hub 40. The engaged spline teeth at the splineconnection 44 are disengaged upon removing bolts 110 and threading alarger bolt into hole 106 such that the bolt contacts web, therebyforcing flexplate axial rightward.

Rotor hub 40 is formed with multiple axially-directed hydraulic passages120 and laterally-directed passages 122, 124, 126, 128, 129, which carryhydraulic fluid and pressure to module 10 from the hydraulic system ofthe transmission 54. Passages 120, 122, 124, 126, 128, 129 carryhydraulic fluid and pressure which includes to the control volume 92 ofthe servo of clutch 22 located at the right hand side of piston 86, tothe pressure balance volume 94 between balance dam 88 and the piston, toa variable force solenoid (VFS) 130, and to the surfaces of rotor 34 andstator 30, which surfaces are cooled by the fluid. The rear bulkhead 60is formed with passage 128, which communicates hydraulically with VFS130.

The rear bulkhead 60 supports a sump 132, which contains fluid suppliedto module 10 from the hydraulic system of the transmission 54.Transmission 54 includes a sump 136, which contains hydraulic fluid thatis supplied by a transmission pump 134 to the transmission hydraulicsystem, from which fluid and control pressure is supplied to module 10,torque converter 49, transmission clutches and brakes, bearings, shafts,gears, etc.

A bearing 140, fitted in the front bulkhead 32, and a bearing 142,fitted in the rotor hub 40, support input shaft 16 in rotation aboutaxis 39. The front bulkhead 32 also supports the stator 30 in its properaxial and radial positions relative to the rotor 34. Bearing 76, fittedbetween rear bulkhead 60 and rotor hub 40, and bearing 142 support rotorhub 40 in rotation about axis 39. The front and rear bulkheads 32, 60together support rotor 34 in rotation about axis 39 due to bearing 74,fitted in bulkhead 32, and bearing 76, fitted in bulkhead 60.

Seal 64, fitted in the rear bulkhead 60, and seal 141, fitted in thefront bulkhead 32, prevent passage of fluid from module 10 locatedbetween the bulkheads 32, 60. Another dynamic seal 144 prevents passageof contaminants between the engine compartment 146 and module 10.

The components of module 10 are installed and assembled in the module.The assembled module can then be installed between and connected to theengine output 12 and the torque converter casing 48.

In operation, when the engine output 12 is driven by an engine, torqueis transmitted from the engine through rotor hub 40 and flexplate 42 tothe torque converter casing 48, provided that clutch 22 is engaged. Therotor 34 electric machine 28 is continually driveably connected throughtube 78, leg 38, rotor hub 40 and flexplate 42 to the torque convertercasing 48. Therefore, the torque converter casing 48 can be driven bythe engine alone, provided the electric machine 28 is off and clutch 22is engaged; by the electric machine alone, provided the engine is off orthe engine in operating and the clutch is disengaged; and by both theengine and electric machine concurrently.

Referring to FIG. 2, the rotor 34 of electric machine 28 is supported ontube 78, which is supported by a shell 160, connected by a weld 162 totube 78 and by welding to rotor hub 40, and by a leg 164, securedthrough an axial, inner spline 166 to shell 160. A single snap ring 168,secured to the shell 160 and contacting leg 164, limits axialdisplacement of the friction plates 84, which are secured by spline 166to shell 160. Spacer plates 83 are secured by an external axial spline170 on clutch hub 24.

A thrust bearing 172 contacts clutch hub 24 and a flange 174 on a shaft176 that is parallel to axis 19. A bearing supports clutch hub On shaft176. The engine output 12 is connected through flywheel 66, damper 20,input shaft 16 and spline 26 to clutch hub 24.

A bearing 182, fitted between front bulkhead 32 and leg 164, supportsthe rotor 34 for rotation about axis 19 and provides a reaction to axialforce transmitted between leg 164 and bulkhead 32.

In operation, piston 86 moves leftward against the force of returnspring 90 when pressurized hydraulic fluid is supplied through passage184 to the cylinder 186 that contains piston 86. Disconnect clutch 22 isengaged when friction plates 83 and spacer plates 84 are forced bypiston 86 into mutual frictional contact, thereby producing a driveconnection between rotor hub 40 and the engine output 12. Rotor 34 iscontinually driveably connected to rotor hub 40 through shell 160.

The leftward axial force applied by piston 86 is transmitted throughplates 83, 84 through 164, snap ring 168, and shell 160.

FIGS. 3-6 illustrate a rotor hub formed from stamped componentscomprising a clutch cylinder 200, a tube 202 and a hub 204. Cylinder 200includes a bore 204, which contains clutch piston 86, preferably, formedby a stamping process, and axial splines 166, which engage clutchseparator plates 84, the cylinder 200 and splines 166 being formed byany of several methods including hammer forging.

Rotor 34 of electric machine 28 is supported on tube 202, which hasrolled ends 208 for retaining the rotor on the tube. Tube 202 can be ofseamless tubing or of tubing having a continuous welded seam. Cylinder200 is preferably secured to tube 202 by a press fit.

Hub 40 is preferably secured to cylinder 200 by welding. Hub 40transmits torque from the electric machine 28 and from the enginethrough the clutch 22 to the torque converter 49 by flex plate 42.

FIG. 4 shows that the axial spline 166 of cylinder 200, comprises aseries of mutually, angularly-spaced valleys at the bore 206 and crests210. Each crest 210 is secured to the radial inner surface 212 of tube202.

Angularly-spaced, axially-directed first channels 214 are defined bysurface 212 and the splines 166 of cylinder 200. The surfaces ofcylinder 200 that forms the valleys is formed with a radial hole 216,which communicates with the channel 214 that is located radiallyoutboard of the respective valley. Cylinder 202 is formed with a seriesof axially-spaced drain holes 218, each communicating with one of thechannels 214.

FIG. 5 shows that rotor 34 is formed with a series of axially-directedsecond channels 220, each communicating through a drain hole 218 withone of the channels 214 of the cylinder 200. Some of the channels 214receive an axially-directed protrusion 222 that extends radially intothe channel, thereby connecting tube 202, cylinder 200, and rotor 34such that they rotate as a unit about axis 39 keeping rotor 34 fromspinning on the outer surface 404 of the tube 202.

FIG. 6 shows that each axial second channel 220 terminates at one of theend plates 224, 226, located at opposite axial ends of rotor 34. Eachend plate 224, 226 is formed with a series of radially-directed passages228, 230, each passage aligned with one of the axial second channels220.

In operation, centrifugal force causes automatic transmission fluid(ATF) in module 10 to flow radially outward through holes 216, channels214 holes 218, channels 220 and passages 228, 230, thereby carrying heatfrom clutch plates 83, 84, cylinder 200, tube 202 and rotor 34 away fromthe module 10. As the fluid exits channels 228 and 230, the oil spraysradially outward due to centrifugal force, contacting the endwindings ofstator 30, thereby cooling the stator. ATF that exits the assembly fallsdue to gravity to a sump at the bottom of module 10, passes through acooler and returns to the transmission sump, from which it is drawn bysuction into the transmission pump for recirculation through thehydraulic system.

In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes, the preferredembodiment has been described. However, it should be noted that thealternate embodiments can be practiced otherwise than as specificallyillustrated and described.

What is claimed is:
 1. A rotor hub, comprising: a sheet metal cylinderincluding spline teeth including angularly spaced crests and valleys; atube surrounding the cylinder, secured to the crests and supporting arotor thereon; a hub secured to the cylinder and supported for rotation;a torque converter; a flex plate secured to the hub and the torqueconverter.
 2. The rotor hub of claim 1, wherein the tube and splinesdefine first channels, the cylinder being formed with holes, each holeextending through one of the valleys and communicating with one of thefirst channels, the tube being formed with drain holes, each drain holecommunicating with one of the first channels.
 3. The rotor hub of claim2, wherein the rotor includes second channels, each second channelcommunicating through one of the drain holes with one of the firstchannels.
 4. The rotor hub of claim 3, wherein the first channels andthe second channels are directed along an axis of rotation.
 5. The rotorhub of claim 3, further comprising end plates, each end plate beinglocated at an opposite end of the rotor and formed with radial passages,each passage communicating with one of the second channels.
 6. The rotorhub of claim 5, wherein the passages are directed radially with respectto an axis of rotation.
 7. The rotor hub of claim 1, wherein the tube isone of a seamless tube and a tube having a continuous welded seam. 8.The rotor hub of claim 1, further comprising: a clutch piston located inthe cylinder; clutch plates engaged with the spline teeth and able to beactuated by the piston.
 9. A rotor hub, comprising: a sheet metalcylinder including spline teeth including angularly spaced crests andvalleys; a tube surrounding the cylinder, secured to the crests andsupporting a rotor thereon; a hub secured to the cylinder and supportedfor rotation.
 10. The rotor hub of claim 9, wherein the tube and splinesdefine first channels, the cylinder being formed with holes, each holeextending through one of the valleys and communicating with one of thefirst channels, the tube being formed with drain holes, each drain holecommunicating with one of the first channels.
 11. The rotor hub of claim10, wherein the rotor includes second channels, each second channelcommunicating through one of the drain holes with one of the firstchannels.
 12. The rotor hub of claim 11, wherein the first channels andthe second channels are directed along an axis of rotation.
 13. Therotor hub of claim 11, further comprising end plates, each end platebeing located at an opposite end of the rotor and formed with radialpassages, each passage communicating with one of the second channels.14. The rotor hub of claim 12, wherein the passages are directedradially with respect to an axis of rotation.
 15. The rotor hub of claim9, wherein the tube is one of a seamless tube and a tube having acontinuous welded seam.
 16. The rotor hub of claim 9, furthercomprising: a clutch piston located in the cylinder; clutch platesengaged with the spline teeth and able to be actuated by the piston. 17.A method for forming a rotor hub, comprising: forming a sheet metalcylinder having spline teeth defining angularly spaced crests andvalleys; securing a tube surrounding the cylinder to the crests;securing a rotor on the tube; and forming a hub secured to the cylinder.18. The method of claim 17 further comprising securing the tube to thecrests by one of welding and press fitting.
 19. The method of claim 17further comprising forming the cylinder by hammer forging.
 20. Themethod of claim 17 further comprising using a flex plate to driveablyconnect the hub to a torque converter.